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The Age of Discovery 1095 to 1500s. Roots of Discovery Pope Urban II Order the Crusades 1095 Contact and Commerce Wealth to Italian City-states Funds.

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Presentation on theme: "The Age of Discovery 1095 to 1500s. Roots of Discovery Pope Urban II Order the Crusades 1095 Contact and Commerce Wealth to Italian City-states Funds."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Age of Discovery 1095 to 1500s

2 Roots of Discovery Pope Urban II Order the Crusades 1095 Contact and Commerce Wealth to Italian City-states Funds Renaissance New Technology

3 Marco Polo 1295 – 20 year Sojourn in China Book inspires travel and exploration – Led to the discovery of a cheaper route to the East.

4 Portugal… 1450 the Caravel was introduced – Allowed for travel down the African coast Allowed for contact with African Gold – 2/3 rd of Europe’s supply Trading Posts – Gold and Slaves Adopted Arab and African practices – Set the standard for new world

5 Lets Push On…A Quest for a New Route to the Indies! Henry the Navigator Bartholomew Diaz 1488 Vasco da Gama 1498 Pedro Cabral 1500

6 Henry the Navigator – Encouraged Portuguese exploration.

7 Bartholomew Diaz – (Found a water rout to Asia) – Rounded southern tip of Africa to search for route to Asia

8 Vasco de Gama – (Found a water rout to Asia) – Reached India: brought treasures creating European thirst for Eastern Goods. – Opened door for Portugal’s Eastern empire

9 Pedro Cabral – Discovered east coast of Brazil during 2 nd failed voyage to India – Brazil will become a colony

10 Spain enters the Search! Columbus 1492 (Italy) Amerigo Vespucci (Maps) Treaty of Tordesillas (1494)

11 Christopher Columbus A successful failure! Born in Italy. Completed four voyages across the Atlantic.

12 Amerigo Vespucci – 1501-02: detailed his exploration in Brazil – German geographer honored Vespucci’s false claim to have been the first to travel to Brazil – Named the new area “America”

13 Treaty of Tordesillas Spain secured claim New World Divided – Portugal: Brazil and territory in Africa and Asia – Spain: dominated North and South America – Spain never had access to slave trade France and England reject the treaty

14 Gold, Silver, Corn, Potatoes, pineapples, tomatoes, tobacco, beans, vanilla, chocolate, syphilis Wheat, sugar, rice, coffee, horses, cows, pigs, smallpox, measles, bubonic plague, influenza, typhus, diphtheria, scarlet fever SlavesSlaves

15 Spanish Conquistadors Vasco Balboa 1513 Ponce De Leon 1513 Magellan 1519-22 Cortes 1519-21 Pizarro 1532 Coronado 1540-42 De Soto 1541

16 Vasco Balboa 1513 – Discovered the Pacific Ocean off of Panama. – Crossed the Isthmus of Panama. – Settled on Hispaniola.

17 Ponce De Leon – Discovered Florida, seeking the fountain of youth.

18 Ferdinand Magellan – Sailed around South America but killed by natives in the Philippines

19 Hernan Cortez – Conquered the Aztecs – Montezuma's envoys thought Cortes was God Quetzalcoatl.

20 Francisco Pizarro – Vast amounts of gold and silver.

21 Francisco Coronado Visited New Mexico and the Southwest Wanted to find the mythical Seven Cities of gold

22 Hernando De Soto First European to cross the Mississippi River. First Governor of Panama.

23 Spanish Accomplishments 200 Cities 2 Universities Control of Millions of Indians

24 Characteristic of the Spanish Empire “God, Gold and Glory” Intermarriage with Indians Centralized Authority Feudal Society

25 French Colonization Verrazano and Cartier Champlain, Quebec 1609 Marquette and La Salle 1673 Outpost and Trade Good relations with Indians

26 Verrazano and Cartier – Sailed coast from Carolina to Maine. – Explored up the St. Lawrence River

27 Champlain, Quebec 1609 – “Father of New France” – 1 Year after the English founded Jamestown in Virginia

28 Marquette and La Salle 1673 – Sailed down Great Lakes – Sought to prevent Spanish expansion into Gulf of Mexico region

29 Obstacles to French Barred Huguenots Canada Difficult Climate Feudal Land System

30 What about the Native Americans? Population Arrived 40,000 years ago on the Bering Strait and spread to the tip of South America Spoke 100s of different languages, religions and cultures and inhabited America. Between 4000 to 1500 BCE created permanent farm villages that would dominate Peru, Central Mexico and Northeastern Mexico Aztecs, Incas, and other “semi-sedentary”

31 Different Views Work – “Women’s Work” Matrilineal and Matrilocal society Property Religion


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